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Sensational Revelations About Saudi Journalists Killing Emerges

ISTANBUL: A sensational revelation regarding the last moment of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi who was reportedly killed in Saudi consulate in Istanbul.

A newspaper Middle East Eye reported that it Jamal quoting a Turkish source who has listened in full to an audio recording of the Saudi journalist’s last moments said it took the journalist seven minutes to die.

Khashoggi was dragged from the Consul General’s office at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul and onto the table of his study next door, the newspaper said.

It added that then screams were heard by a witness downstairs.

“The consul himself was taken out of the room. There was no attempt to interrogate him. They had come to kill him,” the source told MEE.

The screaming stopped when Khashoggi – who was last seen entering the Saudi consulate on 2 October – was injected with an as yet unknown substance.

Salah Muhammad al-Tubaigy, who has been identified as the head of forensic evidence in the Saudi general security department, was one of the 15-member squad who arrived in Ankara earlier that day on a private jet.

Read More: Turkey Enters Residence of Saudi Consul General for More Evidence Over Missing Journalist

The newspaper said Tubaigy began to cut Khashoggi’s body up on a table in the study while he was still alive.

The killing took seven minutes, the source said.
As he started to dismember the body, Tubaigy put on earphones and listened to music. He advised other members of the squad to do the same.

“When I do this job, I listen to music. You should do [that] too,” Tubaigy was recorded as saying, the source told MEE.

A three-minute version of the audio tape has been given to Turkish newspaper Sabah, but they have yet to release it.

A Turkish source told the New York Times that Tubaigy was equipped with a bone saw. He is listed as the president of the Saudi Fellowship of Forensic Pathology and a member of the Saudi Association for Forensic Pathology.

In 2014, London-based Saudi newspaper Asharaq al-Awsat interviewed Tubaigy about a mobile clinic that allows coroners to perform autopsies in seven minutes to determine the cause of death of Hajj pilgrims.

The newspaper reported that the mobile clinic was partly designed by Tubaigy and could be used in “security cases that requires pathologist intervention to perform an autopsy or examine a body at the place of a crime”.

These are the first details to emerge of the Saudi journalist’s killing.

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